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The Transcendental Beatle

Maeve Brennan’s New York

The collected stories of a mid-20th-century Irish writer in Manhattan recall a bygone era of Truman Capote and 50-cent martinis

Poetry in Motion

A new coffee-table book pays homage to Alexander Calder’s kinetic sculptures with a selection of works from the American artist’s most prolific period

Bombs Away!

Past and Presents

Dollhouses, paper angels, fir trees … A new coffee-table book looks back at a century of holiday photographs from around the world

Candid Camera

Inside the 1972 trial that pitted Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis against New York’s most unrelenting paparazzo, Ron Galella

The Queen of Caricature

Before Nora Ephron and Gay Talese, there was Kate Carew, a cartoonist who sat down with everyone from Mark Twain to Picasso

AIR MAIL’s 10 Best Mystery Books of 2024

Death and deceit in Ireland from Tana French and John Banville! An L.A.P.D. cold case! A wicked widow! And much more …

AIR MAIL’s Best Coffee-Table Books of 2024

Dazzling volumes on Rosario Candela’s New York City penthouses and David Hockney’s works on paper, plus photography collections from Ernest Cole, Eve Arnold, and Ruth Orkin and a look inside an Italian home or two

Deadly Pleasures to Read and Watch

Hunker down with the holiday season’s best mysteries

Nicholas Knucklehead

The Anti–Mitford Sisters

AIR MAIL’s 10 Best Books of 2024

Percival Everett’s twist on Huckleberry Finn; biographies of Reagan and Isherwood, Didion, and Babitz; and more holiday reading for every type

How to Write like Harlan Coben

The best-selling author shares the tricks he uses to craft a page-turner—from conjuring up villains to landing the big ending

Concrete Jungles

From Marcel Breuer’s early modernist designs to Le Corbusier’s pocket gardens, two new books speak to the enduring allure of brutalism

Pretty Women

A Boy’s Best Friend …

At Andy Warhol’s suggestion—“she’s so-o-o interesting”—a biographer pulls back the curtain on the artist’s mother, an unsung painter in her own right

Editor’s Picks

This week, don’t miss a history of George Frideric Handel’s popular Christmas oratorio, an examination of old age in America, and an artist’s collection of stories and paintings

Giant Girls Don’t Cry

Edna Ferber’s great-niece pulls back the curtain on the Pulitzer Prize–winning writer’s personal life—and the sacrifices she made for her craft

Out for Bloody Babs

America’s Sweethearts

A new coffee-table book presents a visual history of the United States from the 1940s to today, courtesy of Magnum photographers

The Decline and Fall of the Campus Novel

Kingsley Amis, Evelyn Waugh, and Tom Sharpe used universities as their preferred vehicle for satire. But are modern colleges too ridiculous to parody?

A Turk’s Progress

Don’t Touch That Dial!